@infrabenji , Hi, nice to meet you. Apologies for the lengthy reply. My intention was to give you a complete argument in support of supernatural phenomena so that you know precisely where I'm coming from.
What I gather from your posts in this thread is that your position is: there are no reasons to believe in God, gods, or the supernatural. As has been pointed out by others, evidence for God or gods ( if they exist ) is subjective, therefore there is no objective evidence to support any claim of their existence. However I haven't seen anyone approach the claim that supernatural phenomena don't exist.
The first challenge for me, as someone who is taking the affirmative position on the existence of supernatural phenomena, is to define supernatural in manner which is agreeable for both of us.
For me, for this discussion, supernatural and spiritual are unexplainable unpredictable phenomena. If we can agree on this definition I invite you to do a thought experiment with me regarding whether or not spiritual / supernatural events are real.
The thought experiment is this: Is there a finite end to the number discoveries which can be observed in the natural world? I say, no. Not only that, but in some fields making one objective repeatable discovery leads to many more unanswered questions. In these cases, even though knowledge is objectively increasing, the unknown, the mysteries of reality, are increasing
at a faster rate. If this is true, then isn't it logical to conclude that there will always be phenomena which do not appear to fit within what is considered natural, or repeatable, or observable?
This is essentially a God-of-the-gaps argument, but replace God with supernatural, and add to it the one-to-many relationship between a new discovery and the many unanswered questions which result from it. From this point of view, the unexplainable , the mysteries of the real world, is net increasing even though scientific discovery is increasing too. The question is: which is increasing at the greater rate. I propose that as knowledge increases, the mysteries increase faster, which is a plausible reason to believe in spiritual/supernatural phenomena. I'm not attempting to prove this; I'm only trying to provide a valid reason for this belief.
It's true that the things in the past which were considered supernatural ( illness for example ) have been demystified. This, imo, does not discredit the thought experiment above. It takes some imagination, but, if one discovery often leads to many new unanswered questions, then it's reasonable to infer that there will always be unanswered questions, unrepeatable phenomena which is deemed supernatural. These would be a set of both natural phenomena which can be explained at some later date as well as unexplainable supernatural phenomena.
Again, the reason to believe in supernatural events comes from the deviation between the rate of increase between what is known and what is unknown. I can't predict the future, but I can assess the trend. If there is always much much more unknown than known **and** if the known contributes to the unknown; then that is a valid reason to conclude that there are phenomena which will never be explained by material, natural, physical causes. In summation, imo, the unknown will always eclipse the known.
Granted, this is just a thought experiment. Even if we agree that these ideas have merit, without objective examples it's still a weak argument in favor of supernatural events. Because of this, I'd like to supplement the thought experiment with three examples of what I deem to be supernatural phenomena. At this time, as far as I know, there is no material scientific explanation of these events. Also, I think you'll agree, if there is ever discovered the how and why these things occur, the discoveries would trigger many many more questions thus supporting the thought experiment provided above.
In order from strongest to weakest:
1) Tibetian Tummo. Have you heard of it? It's being able to raise one's body temperature through breathing and mental visualization. It's been tested and verified in the 80s; you can look it up. There's a wikipedia article on it:
link. There's also a practitioner named Master Zhou Ting Jue who has demonstrated heating his hands to 190 deg F. There's a TV show on History channel which attempted to debunk Master Zhou Ting Jue and was unable to do so. I posted a thread here to discuss him specifically:
link. Unfortunately the History Channel expose was taken down off youtube; but the other video posted in the thread shows clearly what is done. Please note that Master Zhou Ting Jue does not appear to be exherting himself to accomplish the temp increase.
2) Past Life Experiences: there are about 4-5 very convincing examples of people who with astonishing detail are able to recall events, places, and people from their past lives. In addition to these 4, there is a list floating around out there documenting many of these past life experiences which were researched and published as unexplainable. I think this list has been posted here a few times in the past. If there is interest I can look it up. The point is, in rare cases memories do not end with mortality.
3) Love: This is in my opinion the least convincing example, but still worthy of mention. My assertion is that Love in all its various forms is completely unpredictable and often unexplainable. This qualifes it as supernatural / spiritual. Even if there is a discovery of the fundamental neuro-chemical causes for all types of Love, I have a hard time believing that delivering this to people would result in predictable relationships.
So, that's it. I cannot prove there is a God, or gods. But there are reasons to believe in the supernatural. This is based on the trajectory of scientific discoveries which lead to more unanswered questions in perpetuity a well as a few objective unexplained phenomena which are so bizzarre I doubt that they will every be completely understood as natural.
I look forward to reading your reply if you choose to do so.
Sincerely,
edit: Master Zhou Ting Jue is demonstrating Qi-Gong, which is Chinese, not from Tibet.